Word: sampsons
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...power throughout the line was turned on again at 8:37 p.m. and traffic from Harvard Square to Ashmont was resumed shortly. District Fire Chief John F. Sampson said the fire was probably due to a short circuit caused by defective wiring. Damage was estimated...
...women's division, it was the U.S. which had the winning youngsters. Maureen Connolly, the 1952 champion of Wimbledon and the U.S., whipped California's Julie Sampson, 6-3, 6-2, for the Australian singles title, then teamed up with her defeated opponent to win the doubles. Mixed doubles winners, the U.S.'s Sampson and Australia's Rex Hartwig, an oldster of 20 who finally managed to dent the 18-year-olds' monopoly...
...American girls, Maureen Connolly and Julie Sampson, yesterday won the women's doubles title at Keeyong Courts be defeating Mary Hawton and Beryl Penrose of Australia, 6-4, 6-2. Ken Rosewall and Lewis Hoad won the men's doubles title later...
...politics that South Africa's non-whites can get in no other magazine. It was started by Publisher Bailey, 33, an ex-R.A.F. combat pilot, who settled down to raise sheep and breed horses after the war. As editor, Bailey picked a white South African friend, Anthony Sampson, 26, whom he had known at Oxford where they had often discussed South Africa's race problem. Drum is staffed largely by non-white writers...
Wired & Whipped. Both Bailey and Sampson faced opposition from the Malan government, whose nightmare is "whites drowning in a black sea." The government threatened to choke off Drum's paper supply for such things as printing pictures of Eleanor Roosevelt shaking hands with a Negro. Police have also taken to shadowing Drum staffers, checking on where they go and whom they see. Despite the threats, Drum has made its mark with a series of spectacular exposes...